Ronda Rousey’s Dilemma: What’s the Best to Do When the Rest Can’t Keep Up?

America loves dominance.
To paraphrase one of the UFC’s most irritating catchphrases—it’s in our DNA.
Sure, we’ll shell out $10 to cheer the perfect underdog story at a weekend matinee or wax nostalgic over a 30-for-30 documenta…

America loves dominance.

To paraphrase one of the UFC’s most irritating catchphrases—it’s in our DNA.

Sure, we’ll shell out $10 to cheer the perfect underdog story at a weekend matinee or wax nostalgic over a 30-for-30 documentary championing the little guy, but in real life we want winners.

We prefer Mike Tyson to Rocky Balboa, the New York Yankees to the Bad News Bears and Michael Jordan to Jimmy Chitwood. Every metric we have—from television ratings to merchandise sales—tells us this is true.

In the case of UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey, however, you have to wonder if there’s an upper limit to how much dominance mainstream America can stomach without it growing stale.

Rousey’s roughshod run through the rest of the best 135-pound women on the planet took another impressive, but predictable, step on Saturday when she knocked out Bethe Correia in 34 seconds at UFC 190.

The win boosted her overall record to 12-0—including 11 first-round finishes and nine victories that lasted less than a minute.

It also dovetailed with Rousey’s ascendance to pop culture superstardom.

Despite the fact Correia shaped up as the least dangerous opponent of her career, prefight coverage included largely fawning pieces about Rousey from media heavy-hitters like ESPN, the New York Times and Time Magazine.

In May, Sports Illustrated’s Jon Wertheim called her the world’s most dominant athlete. As of Monday afternoon, the Worldwide Leader still had her in heavy rotation on television and radio. This week we also learned Rousey will soon produce and star in a biopic about her own life.

It will be a little while before we get final, specific estimates on UFC 190’s success, but the web traffic from the fight has been off the charts, and the pay-per-view buy rate is expected to be, too:

It’s rapidly starting to seem as if Rousey is the perfect combat sports star for 2015—a larger-than-life, tough-talking personality whose fights typically last about as long as an Instagram video.

She’s also a woman dominating in a highly male-centric sport, which never hurts when you’re trying to bring platforms like Cosmopolitan, Rolling Stone and Esquire under the tent.

Her fights thus far have been terrible mismatches, and she’s won them all in fitting fashion. Celebrities have taken a shine to her, and now she too is becoming some version of a celebrity.

Whether the fighter and her bosses at the UFC want to admit it, however, last weekend’s victory over Correia left Rousey at an interesting promotional crossroads.

Just as her career trajectory reaches its apex, matchmakers seem unable to find her a competitive fight. The only woman in the known world who might give her one is Invicta FC featherweight champion Cris “Cyborg” Justino, but that matchup doesn’t appear anywhere close to happening.

Meanwhile, top in-house contender Holly Holm needs more time to find her legs inside the Octagon or else she’ll surely suffer the same fate as Rousey’s previous foes.

The end result is that five fights and two-and-a-half years into her Octagon run, Rousey has all but cleaned out her weight class. Her next appearance is scheduled to be a third meeting with arch nemesis Miesha Tate, whom Rousey has already handily defeated twice.

She and Tate will no doubt be good for some quality prefight trash talk, but nobody expects the outcome to be any different.

So, you see the multimillion-dollar dilemma facing the UFC: Rousey has caught the attention of the masses, but can she keep it if she merely goes on being a self-fulfilling prophecy?

At least inside the MMA community there are fears people may tire of her fights, which cost $60 but mostly last less than a minute. It’s also a real possibility the UFC might just run out of fresh bodies to feed her.

Correia came in as the UFC’s No. 5-ranked bantamweight but was only deemed fit as an opponent because Rousey had already trounced the women numbered 1-4. Now that Correia has joined her list of victims, the champ holds victories over seven of the fighters in the 135-pound Top 10.

Normally, when a UFC champion cleans out his or her division, there are calls for a move up in weight so the titleholder can face new challenges. With Rousey, there’s nowhere left for her to go. She’s already defeated the best competition the fight company can find her, and she’s done it with the ease of Barry Bonds ripping a few dingers at a kid’s T-ball game.

And look, the effortlessness of her victories shouldn’t be a surprise. Rousey is the best athlete in a very shallow weight class. She posses far and away the most impressive amateur accolades there, too. Take her status as a child judo prodigy, her physical size, strength, speed and personal ruthlessness, and it’s no wonder her peers can’t keep up with her.

Put it another way: Rousey is a lifelong judoka and world-class competitor who won a bronze medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Correia? She reportedly took up MMA in 2011 as a way to lose weight.

When those two people fought in a cage last weekend, who did we really expect to win?

Women’s MMA has only been a staple in the UFC since the beginning of 2013 and is still very much in its developmental phase. In its present state, it’s highly unlikely a new and dangerous opponent for Rousey will just appear out of thin air.

If that’s the case, then our immediate choices are: Cyborg? Or the field?

So far, it looks like the field will win the day, and that raises very real questions about whether Rousey’s lack of competition will become a problem.

For some time, the UFC has tried to paint her as MMA’s answer to Tyson. It’s a shrewd strategy, likely designed to condition the public to expect women’s MMA to go on being Rousey and a collection of random opponents.

It’s also a fairly new marketing ploy for the UFC, where—unlike boxing—compelling matchups have always been the rule. We don’t know if the Rousey-as-Tyson gambit will hold up long-term. We don’t know if her particular brand of ferocity will have the same kind of staying power.

Despite the outcome of the Correia fight, Rousey is primarily known as a grappler, not a fearsome knockout artist. It remains to be seen if she can sustain her status as a media darling if she merely continues to pick the bones of an already-depleted UFC roster.

The organization’s best hope, of course, is that all this worrying exists only inside the MMA bubble.

Rousey’s notoriety has reached the point where the UFC is no longer really trying to sell her fights to actual fight fans. The casual spectators who now make up the most potent portion of her fanbase may not even care if her competition is legitimate or not. Heck, they might not even notice.

There are some early indications this could be true:

It’s also possible a lack of real opposition could stunt Rousey’s mainstream appeal.

It’s obvious she has seized the attention of top tastemakers for now. She’s the UFC’s ultimate overdog story, and so far people are buying into it without asking too many tough questions.

But for how long? At some point, does the PPV-buying public start to ask what exactly it’s watching? And whether what it’s watching is worth the money?

None of this is Rousey’s fault, obviously. The only thing she can do is beat the opponents who are put in front of her, and so far she’s done that better than almost anyone we’ve seen before.

Perhaps that’s the trouble.

Conventional sports wisdom says there’s no such thing as being too dominant, but Rousey appears deadest on testing that theory.

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UFC’s Patrick Cummins Proves You Can Win and Still Get Your Face Destroyed

Patrick Cummins had little trouble in his UFC 190 victory over Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante, but he certainly did not escape the contest unscathed.
On Monday afternoon, Joe Rogan posted a photo to Instagram of Cummins, and the light heav…

Patrick Cummins had little trouble in his UFC 190 victory over Rafael “Feijao” Cavalcante, but he certainly did not escape the contest unscathed.

On Monday afternoon, Joe Rogan posted a photo to Instagram of Cummins, and the light heavyweight athlete looks downright awful 48 hours after his win.

The photo is not for the faint at heart:

“This is what Pat Cummins @officialdurkin looks like 2 days after the biggest win of his @UFC career,” Rogan wrote in the accompanying caption. “The faint of heart need not apply. Pat is a f—–g true savage! Congrats!”

According to MMAjunkie.com, Cummins is on a potential six-month medical suspension by the Comissao Atletica Brasileira de MMA with a fractured nose following the event. He can get back in the cage as soon as he is cleared by a physician.

Cummins has a few stitches under his right eyebrow, and the blood in his eyes is still visible. Cavalcante did extraordinary damage for landing so few strikes. Over the course of 10 minutes, the Brazilian only landed 23 significant strikes to Cummins.

The American simply outwrestled and outworked Feijao. The former Strikeforce champion got extremely tired, and Cummins finished the fight with a flurry of ferocious elbows. Cummins looked worse for the wear, but he was in control nearly the entire fight.

The bout was even briefly halted to check on Cummins’ injuries to see if he could continue.

The damage to Cummins highlights that in MMA, judging purely by damage can be misleading. Feijao turned Cummins into a mess at UFC 190 while being planted firmly on his back time and again. But Cummins, a former Nittany Lion wrestler, landed eight takedowns in the fight.

Cummins will move back up the ranks at 205 pounds following his top-10 win at UFC 190. In the shallow waters of light heavyweight, he will undoubtedly inch closer to bigger fights as soon as he recovers from the tremendous damage he sustained against Feijao.

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UFC 190 Results: Ronda Rousey, Bethe Correia and the Art of Selling Wolf Tickets

Lying facedown on the canvas, Bethe Correia saw things clearly for the first time in a long time. If only for a few, hazy milliseconds—trapped between the conscious realm and the unconscious one—Correia’s cloud of puffery dissolved, s…

Lying facedown on the canvas, Bethe Correia saw things clearly for the first time in a long time. If only for a few, hazy milliseconds—trapped between the conscious realm and the unconscious one—Correia’s cloud of puffery dissolved, setting up a thunderous crash back down to Earth.

Three long hours of waiting for Ronda Rousey to finally take the cage against Correia culminated in a 34-second rout on Saturday night at UFC 190. For all of the talk surrounding judo and armbars, Rousey’s right hand was the weapon of choice.

A sniper shot behind the ear closed the book on the most nonsensical women’s bantamweight championship bout in UFC history.

Let’s call it like it is: Correia wasn’t ready to be in the cage with Rousey. All of Correia’s previous UFC bouts came against opponents with a combined UFC record of 1-7. She had never even faced a top-10 opponent. The only sticking point the UFC had to go on was Correia’s undefeated record and god-fearing knockout power, despite the fact that she had never knocked anyone out.

“Bethe Correia has tools. She’s got skills. She’s got power. If this becomes a standup fight, she will have an advantage,” UFC commentator Joe Rogan said in the UFC 190 extended preview

The very idea that Correia had an advantage anywhere against Rousey was folly. It was exaggerated hype. As Nick Diaz would say, “they’re selling you all wolf tickets people, and you’re eating it right up.”

There is no doubt in my mind that Correia’s conviction was sincere. She truly believed she’d be the one to shock the world and send Rousey packing. But Rousey is simply on another level. The gap between Rousey and the rest of her division is the size of the equator.

We have gone from bona fide threats to circus fights. People are no longer placing wagers on whether or not Rousey will win a fight. Instead, we are tuning in to see how she wins. Will it be by knockout or submission? Will it be in 36 seconds or 14 seconds?

It’s like throwing a man into a cage with a grizzly bear and paying to see if something spectacular happens. It’s Mike Tyson-esque. For the younger readers out there, Tyson was the titular juggernaut in professional boxing from the mid-’80s to mid-’90s.  

As a kid, I can vividly remember the poor soul with glazed eyes lying facedown on the floor after a Tyson fight. My mother had a mean left hook, and my father kept spending money on fights that only lasted 30 seconds.

Even in a lopsided attraction, a promoter’s job is to sell the fight. There are some athletes surfing the cosmos with their talents, while the rest spectate from below through binoculars.

Rousey is that fighter in the women’s bantamweight division. She has finished her last four opponents in less than three minutes combined. People are paying $60 to watch her finish challengers quicker than I can pump out a set of push-ups. Luckily for the UFC, the world is infatuated with Rousey’s greatness. She could literally sell out an arena fighting American Olympian Lolo Jones.

Is that the direction we’re headed with the Rousey phenomenon—fictitious hype for bad paper matchups? It’s a real possibility considering Holly Holm is the only prospect out of a long line of beaten contenders.

Rousey is currently gearing up for a trilogy with longtime nemesis Miesha Tate, who she has already submitted twice.

According to UFC President Dana White, who spoke at the UFC 190 post-fight press conference, Rousey and Tate is slated for Cowboy Stadium in Dallas as the co-headliner to the prodigious featherweight title fight between Jose Aldo and Conor McGregor. There are definitely no marketing concerns for that event.

As for Correia, she’ll have a soapbox to stand on again soon, assuming she continues to get the right fights and say the right things.

When that day comes, it’ll be as though she never left.

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

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UFC 190 Results: Is Ronda Rousey the Greatest of All Time?

Ronda Rousey is the biggest star in MMA history. That much can’t even be argued. She’s in magazines, commercials and blockbuster Hollywood movies. You can rest assured an ESPN camera is around the corner every time she fights.
She has singl…

Ronda Rousey is the biggest star in MMA history. That much can’t even be argued. She’s in magazines, commercials and blockbuster Hollywood movies. You can rest assured an ESPN camera is around the corner every time she fights.

She has single-handedly broken into the mainstream sports world. Young women on hand to see her workout in Rio last week had tears of joy streaming down their faces. A small child ran past security with his heart set on sneaking in a hug from the reigning UFC women’s bantamweight champion.

Rousey’s star power isn’t fixated around young men and hardcore MMA fans. It goes way beyond that. Rousey is the one fighter your mother and grandmother are talking about. She’s the reason for the old, grumpy neighbor’s momentary infatuation with MMA. She’s the reason LeBron James remained seated at the ESPYs.

No, there is no bigger star than Ronda Rousey in MMA.

But superstardom aside, Rousey broke down another barrier on Saturday night at UFC 190, where she dusted off top women’s bantamweight contender Bethe Correia in 34 seconds with a highlight reel knockout.

She has now positioned herself along the likes of Jon Jones, Georges St-Pierre, Anderson Silva and Jose Aldo as quite possibly the greatest MMA fighter of all time.

Yahoo Sports’ Kevin Iole argues:

If there were a male UFC champion who was 12-0 and had won his last three fights in 16, 14 and 34 seconds, that man would almost by acclamation be proclaimed the top pound-for-pound fighter in the world as well as the greatest who ever lived.

Iole is absolutely right in that regard. Rousey has annihilated the competition. The path to the queen’s throne at 135 pounds is covered with trampled hearts and the skeletal remains of missing limbs. She has finished her last four opponents in less than three minutes combined.

Imagine if Aldo was doing this to opponents. What would people be saying about him?

Of course, the notion that Rousey is the greatest of all time does have serious cracks. She isn’t facing nearly the same level of opposition as Aldo and other world champions. There is no reason to feign as if Correia was a proven contender heading into the fight. All of Correia’s UFC opponents up until that point had a combined UFC record of 1-7.

Rousey isn’t staring down a murderer’s row of contenders. The women’s bantamweight division has only existed in the UFC for two years, which means the level of talent isn’t that deep yet. But as time goes by, Rousey’s dominance will encourage more and more women to get involved in MMA, and the overall talent in the division will grow.

Rousey isn’t the greatest of all time, but her name holds weight. She is one of the best—man or woman—to ever put on a pair of four ounce gloves. But if we’re talking greatest of all time, we’re going to need a herculean feat inside the cage.

Perhaps a move to 145 pounds to challenge Cristiane “Cyborg” Justino would do the trick.  

 

Jordy McElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He also is the MMA writer for FanRag Sports and co-founder of The MMA Bros.

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The Internet’s Best Parodies of Ronda Rousey vs. Bethe Correia (UFC 190 Results)

By now, you’ve all surely heard what Ronda Rousey did to poor Bethe Correia at UFC 190 on Saturday. The champ humiliated her, simply put, beating the Brazilian power puncher at her own game and flattening her with a right hand 34 seconds into the first round. As she has done countless times in the past, Rousey managed to both meet and defy our expectations in the method and ease in which she put away a clearly outmatched opponent.

But rather than do our usual post-fight recap, we’re just going to compile what have been a fantastic series of reactions to the Rousey-Correia fight, starting with the GTA 5-style “wasted” treatment above. Check out the rest after the jump, but do it quick, because these will likely be taken down within the hour.

The post The Internet’s Best Parodies of Ronda Rousey vs. Bethe Correia (UFC 190 Results) appeared first on Cagepotato.

By now, you’ve all surely heard what Ronda Rousey did to poor Bethe Correia at UFC 190 on Saturday. The champ humiliated her, simply put, beating the Brazilian power puncher at her own game and flattening her with a right hand 34 seconds into the first round. As she has done countless times in the past, Rousey managed to both meet and defy our expectations in the method and ease in which she put away a clearly outmatched opponent.

But rather than do our usual post-fight recap, we’re just going to compile what have been a fantastic series of reactions to the Rousey-Correia fight, starting with the GTA 5-style “wasted” treatment above. Check out the rest after the jump, but do it quick, because these will likely be taken down within the hour.

Being a big fan of Celebrity Deathmatch in its heyday, I found this claymation treatment of the Rousey vs. Correia to be particularly enjoyable.

AND STILL

A video posted by ???? (@azxd) on

Here we have a “Before & After” comparison of Correia’s trash-talk at the weigh-ins paired against Rousey’s cutting post-fight remark. There’s not a doubt in my mind that, should Correia be a r/MMA user, this will be the gif that keeps her up nights.

Here’s Lil’ Wayne attempting to convey his awe despite a his fundamental misunderstanding of the English language. Poor lil’ guy.

And finally, here’s a brilliant parody of Joe Rogan’s congratgulations/declaration of love to Rousey following the win.

Elsewhere on the UFC 190 card, the Nogueira brothers had a rough go of things, some TUF Brazil guys you’ve never heard of beat some other TUF Brazil guys you’ve never heard of, and Antonio Silva managed to not get violently KO’d, so check out the complete results from UFC 190 below.

Main card
Ronda Rousey def. Bethe Correia via first-round KO
Mauricio Rua def. Antonio Rogerio Nogueira via unanimous decision
Gianco Franca def. Fernando Bruno via submission (rear-naked choke)
Reginaldo Vieira def. Dileno Lopes via unanimous decision
Stefan Struve def. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira via unanimous decision
Antonio Silva def. Soa Palelei via second-round TKO
Claudia Gadelha def. Jessica Aguilar via unanimous decision

Undercard
Demian Maia def. Neil Magny via submission (rear-naked choke)
Patrick Cummins def. Rafael Cavalcante via third-round TKO
Warlley Alves def. Nordine Taleb via submission (guillotine)
Iuri Alcantara def. Leandro Issa via unanimous decision
Vitor Miranda def. Clint Hester via second-round TKO
Guido Cannetti def. Hugo Viana via unanimous decision

The post The Internet’s Best Parodies of Ronda Rousey vs. Bethe Correia (UFC 190 Results) appeared first on Cagepotato.

Ronda Rousey More Than Just the World’s ‘Most Dominant Athlete’

Perfection is a false construct.
But in the here and now, Ronda Rousey, dubbed the world’s most dominant athlete by Jon Wertheim of Sports Illustrated, seems as close to perfect as one might get. It’s a completely unfair label to saddle on anyone….

Perfection is a false construct.

But in the here and now, Ronda Rousey, dubbed the world’s most dominant athlete by Jon Wertheim of Sports Illustrated, seems as close to perfect as one might get. It’s a completely unfair label to saddle on anyone. But after Saturday night’s destruction of Bethe Correia at UFC 190—a challenger who had very little chance of upending the champ—it feels like she can do no wrong.

In today’s social-media malaise, Rousey appears to be a nearly flawless prototype for remaining front and center. She’s Mike Tyson, but for a new age of fisticuffs. Mixed martial arts is well-suited for a world that seemingly becomes more attention-deficient with each new tweet and Instagram post. SportsCenter even shared a photo of Tyson and Rousey, noting Tyson’s comment on “seeing himself in Rousey”:

While boxing is the sweet science, fights often feel too long and lacking in action for today’s fan. In the ashes of Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Manny Pacquiao, Evander Holyfield wrote for The Players’ Tribune that boxing isn’t what it once was. The most-watched prizefight in the history of mankind was nearly universally panned for lacking in substance.

While people have complained about Rousey’s fights being over before they start, a generation that is in love with six-second Vine videos and Snapchat messages that self-destruct seems increasingly well-equipped to deal with a bout ending too soon versus one taking too long.

The great part about a clash ending too soon is that it was usually the result of intense bursts of action. Fights made for sharing. MMA has its fair share of boring matchups—look no further than some of the fights that preceded Rousey vs. Correia.

But in the end, Rousey’s fight shined through.

The boxing vs. MMA debate has raged on for years now. It’s brainless banter for the most part, and this article isn’t trying to add fuel to that fire. More so, it’s to highlight that MMA is very much here and now. And right now, Rousey is the perfect highlight for the sport.

And we can’t ignore the fact that she’s a woman. In the context of sports, Rousey is a fighter first. But as a pioneer, megastar and badass in MMA, being a woman means something. First and foremost, it means the sport she’s chosen is reaching more women.

Her Cosmopolitan profile from this past week is a perfect example.

In it she talks about how gaining 15 pounds made her feel more beautiful. You won’t see Rousey counting calories if anyone should foolishly tell her she needs to drop a few pounds. Sure, she cuts weight for the mandatory pre-fight weigh-ins. But then she goes right back to feeling comfortable in her skin and picking up side work as a blue jean and swimsuit model. 

To many, the woman whose on-the-job performance convinced UFC President Dana White to give women’s MMA a chance has become a role model; she’s someone who’s used her platform to break down gender barriers. For her part, Rousey doesn’t feel comfortable calling herself a role model. 

That said, she’s clearly using her platform.

Rousey pulled no punches when talking about her own physique in a pre-fight episode of the UFC’s Embedded video blog series. 

When people try to say my body looks masculine or something like that, I’m like, listen, just because my body was developed for a purpose other than f–king millionaires doesn’t mean it’s masculine. I think it’s femininely badass as f–k, because there’s not a single muscle on my body that isn’t for a purpose, because I’m not a do-nothing b—h.

Her term “do nothing b—h” or a “DNB” is one she uses for the kind of woman her mom raised her to not be. It’s a label she has for the kinda “chick” (her words, not ours) who tries to be pretty and be taken care of by somebody else. 

She clearly holds some strong beliefs surrounding women in today’s culture. And she’s not afraid to be brazen in her approach. She’ll certainly never be mistaken for a Stepford wife. 

Rousey is also a budding actress—possibly a star-in-the-making. She has the same Hollywood agent as Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. That’s pretty good company. Johnson’s done a nearly pitch-perfect job of leveraging his wildly popular run in the world of professional wrestling to transition into becoming one of the past decade’s biggest action stars.

Folks already got a glimpse of what it would look like for Rousey and Johnson to share the stage, as they did at this year’s WrestleMania. Pro wrestling fans not only knew who Rousey was, but they cheered her as if she was one of them. Dare we say: She stole the show.

Beyond her ability to pack every bar in town on fight night; beyond her pride in her own body and on her terms; beyond any movie she ends up making; what really allows Rousey to work so well in the limelight is her personality.

She’s vindictive but vulnerable. She told Correia not to cry after losing Saturday night—something Correia told her not to do at the weigh-ins the day before, per Damon Martin of Fox Sports. But she has admitted that she’s a big crier. She’s funny and disarming, but she can get serious in a second. Rousey has shown a wide range of emotions under the bright lights.

She often wears those emotions on her sleeves for all to see. You can tell she is shy to some degree, when asked to answer certain questions. Saturday night at the post-fight presser she started to clam up when reporters repeatedly asked her a question. But when the moment calls for it, she’s ready and willing to be the supernova fans and critics alike cannot look away from.

She’s both a rolling stone and a wallflower—especially, according to her, the latter.

She told Cosmopolitan, “I’m the most chill couch potato you could ever meet. I just like to hang out with my dog and watch Planet Earth documentaries, play Taichi Panda [laughs]. I’m actually really lame, to be honest. I don’t party at all, and I’m pretty lame to hang out with.”

The biggest personal takeaway with Rousey after having covered her for several years is that she feels about as authentic as it gets, for better or worse, especially for an athlete whose star has been climbing at a jaw-dropping trajectory. What you see is what you get, as the saying goes.

That doesn’t mean she’s skirted scrutiny. Some in the MMA community, including Mike Fagan of MMASucka.com, think she’s not worth celebrating. Given that she doesn’t have much of a filter, she was bound to create some controversy.

Her crude comments on Fallon Fox took center stage in a heated discussion within the MMA community on transgender fighters competing in the women’s division.

Rousey went on to clarify to HuffPost Live (via Kira Brekke of the Huffington Post) that she never refused to fight a trans athlete, but she does have concerns over what she sees as a possible competitive-advantage issue, though the Post noted, “Many medical professionals have debunked comments similar to Rousey’s for not being based in science.”

In time, Rousey may speak on the issue more, further clarifying where she stands. In the wake of Caitlyn Jenner’s story of personal triumph, it’s clear the fight for transgender athletes’ rights is an important issue whose time has come.

That aside, at 28, the world appears to be her oyster. LeBron James tweeted her good luckKobe Bryant hashtagged her performance #mastery. White said at the post-fight presser, “I don’t think we’ve ever had an event with so many athletes and celebrities tweeting about it.

She’ll be taking a break from her day job to co-star alongside Mark Wahlberg in Mile 22. Maybe she’ll take on a bigger role at next year’s WrestleMania in April. Before that she’ll fight her biggest rival to date, Miesha Tate, possibly at AT&T Stadium in December, and alongside her current male counterpart, Conor McGregor. 

And in between all of that, maybe Rousey, far from perfect—because nobody is—will get some downtime to hang out with her dog and catch the latest Planet Earth documentary.

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